Archive for July, 2011
Do You Have The Tao In Your Toolkit?
In his blog post, The Tao of Librarianship, Andy Burkhardt reminds us how we can apply the ancient wisdom of Taoism to library policies and services. Burkhardt addresses library food policies, space design, planned abandonment of outdated formats and services, and adapting to change through the lens of Taoist philosophy, which he summarizes as, “instead [...]
Posted: 26 July, 2011 in Administration/Leadership, Information Literacy, Innovation, Professional Development, Top Issues, Worth Reading.
Comments: -
Are You Thinking About Going Corporate
I had two jobs before I started my first academic library position. Going through library school I was thinking special libraries. I never really thought much about academic librarianship as a career option. The prospects of working on more in depth research projects for others appealed to me. One of the special library jobs was [...]
Posted: 22 July, 2011 in Professional Development.
Tags: career_change, corporate_libraries, special_libraries
Comments: 2
Stranger Than Fiction
My head’s been buzzing since I first read yesterday on the New York Times Bits Blog that coder and activist Aaron Swartz was indicted under federal hacking laws for illegally downloading millions of articles from JSTOR (the full text of the indictment is embedded at the bottom of the post). Since then I’ve read through [...]
Posted: 20 July, 2011 in Information Ethics, Open Access.
Tags: Aaron Swartz, downloading, journal articles, JSTOR, licenses, scholarly journals
Comments: 2
Who Reads and How?
Barry Cull, Information Services Librarian at the University of New Brunswick, Canada, has written Reading Revolutions: Online digital text and implications for reading in academe, a valuable review article on reading research that investigates important questions and provides a corrective to the idea (we’re looking at you NEA and Steve Jobs) that “no one reads [...]
Posted: 12 July, 2011 in Books, Worth Reading.
Comments: 3
Thinking About ‘The Filter Bubble’
This month’s post in our series of guest academic librarian bloggers is by Jessica Hagman, Reference and Instruction Librarian at Ohio University. She blogs at Jess in Ohio. Last fall, I taught a one-credit learning community seminar. During the week where we discussed research and library resources, I showed the class this video from Google, [...]
Posted: 7 July, 2011 in Google, Information Literacy, Student Issues, Technology Issues.
Tags: Facebook, filter bubbles, Google, personalization, web searching
Comments: 6
